Please don't apologize for making another Dooby video, they are always fascinating. They seem to be going to ever increasing lengths to cheapen them and bring down their service life.
@neilwilliams29073 жыл бұрын
Your comment was left 6 days ago but this video came out today? Something seems odd here!
@jaytee81883 жыл бұрын
@@neilwilliams2907 Patreon.
@DavidLindes3 жыл бұрын
Well, and it may not even matter how much cheaper it is, relative to how often they’ll be replaced. If only more people were more aware of planned obsolescence, and would avoid products like this.... (or, for those into government regulations, then if only there were regulations that LED lamps had to have an average lifetime of, say, 30 years or something, under typical conditions.
@radders2613 жыл бұрын
Was going to say the excact same thing, but you beat me to it lol.
@neilwilliams29073 жыл бұрын
@@jaytee8188 Ahh! Gotcha :-)
@raymondmucklow37933 жыл бұрын
Never get tired of Led Lamp video. Another fine video. Cheers from almost warm kansas.
@SlimNateKC3 жыл бұрын
Ayyy, I’m in Kansas too, what up brotha
@brianbartlett98233 жыл бұрын
Me three, aka also in Kansas, hello all.
@mattakudesu3 жыл бұрын
I love these lamp videos because the schematics are simple enough for me to understand and it's always interesting to see what components they use.
@DocNo273 жыл бұрын
I found your channel originally for this content - don't ever apologize for being you!
@iStormUK3 жыл бұрын
You look at as many lamps as you like, I could listen to you read a weeks worth of shipping forecasts, your voice soothes me! :)
@rpdom3 жыл бұрын
You can't make too many LED lamp videos. They were the reason I started watching your channel. I'd bought a Poundland bulb a few years ago and wanted to know how they made them so cheap. I searched and found one of your videos. Your clear and relaxed style got me hooked. I recently modified a couple of the new Poundland bulbs after watching your last video on the subject. Keep it up!
@ralfoide3 жыл бұрын
Pro tip: you can make the LED lights last even longer and use almost not power at all if you take out *both* resistors! As for the very existence of the 5-LED version... Mass retailers pressure OEMs to come up with products as cheap as they can get away with. A few cents saved per lamp means better retailer margin, who cares what's inside! "Quality" is measured in defect/returns vs. people keep buying them... so the lamps just need to last long enough for people to not return them, trash them when dead ("oh it must be just that one that's bad"), and keep buying more. Cycle works and self sustains. Just ignore the massive trash / recycling issue, that's a SEP (someone's else problem).
@TheNiteNinja193 жыл бұрын
"I got a 3000 lumen lamp! Annnd its on fire."
@XanderProduction3 жыл бұрын
._.) I have tried to remove both resistor and it simply just turned off..
@regmigrant3 жыл бұрын
@@XanderProduction so the LED will last forever...
@XanderProduction3 жыл бұрын
@@regmigrant essentialy becoming Dark LED Diode..
@abrarshaikh22543 жыл бұрын
@@regmigrant lol 😂
@rogerhargreaves22723 жыл бұрын
Clive, your videos of L.E.D. lamps are never boring. I think that we should however start a petition to Parliament to get bulb manufacturers to supply us Dubai style bulbs. None of us are fans of landfill, which is what these cheap bulbs contribute to. Great share Clive, thank you. 👍
@michaelhorton61663 жыл бұрын
No reason at all to apologize for the video! We are happy to watch whatever content you choose.
@ericchang77063 жыл бұрын
I've watched every one of your LED videos multiple times and have learned more from you in the last year about circuits than I have in 20 years of trying to understand basic circuits. Please keep hacking and sharing the results.
@islandhopperstuart3 жыл бұрын
FYI E309772 is the UL file number for the registered manufacturer, in this case JIANGXI HONGYU CIRCUIT TECHNOLOGY CO LTD, Ganzhou City, Jiangxi Province, China. Please keep the LED lamp videos coming Clive!
@alanesq13 жыл бұрын
Vertasium recently did a video on lightbulb planned obsolescence which is very interesting "This is why we can't have nice things"
@dionamuh3 жыл бұрын
And a lot of people commented on that video saying Big Clive is pointing out the planned obsolescence of LED lights, and mentioned the Dubai bulbs. Because unfortunately Veritasium basically made it seem like all current LED lights are the solution to everything.
@EggBastion3 жыл бұрын
@@dionamuh Our Rob or Ross
@gingernutpreacher3 жыл бұрын
@@EggBastion the snake eventually eats it self
@VerifyTheTruth2 жыл бұрын
I Have Never Owned An LED Device That Has Outlived The Actual Lifespan Of The LED's In It.
@jimmychin83133 жыл бұрын
Please keep doing more of these dooby videos, I will never ever tire of them. Would love it even more if you do the lumens meter readouts and tabulate the efficiencies.
@bretthermance81543 жыл бұрын
good idea!!!
@RouteBGP3 жыл бұрын
You know you are "economy minded" when you spend half an hour watching Clive hack a 30p per-year lamp into a 10p per-year lamp. :) Thank you Sir.
@Kogacarlo Жыл бұрын
Economy minded? I would rather say anti throw away minded.
@flytrapjohn3 жыл бұрын
Never enough of this content sir. Saving landfill and energy. Thank you.
@andrewedis99073 жыл бұрын
The return of the Kink Palculator, I love it. 😊🤣
@GIN_LD3 жыл бұрын
I'm choked lmao 😂😂😂
@peterg.82453 жыл бұрын
Cink Palculator
@vaclavtrpisovsky3 жыл бұрын
AKA _LotR 3_
@Kredo8002 жыл бұрын
LED lamps episodes are highly welcome for me. You're not repeating, you're making it polished. Tech does not stop, cirquit changes are frequent, keep ppl updated. love this part of your channel about these lamps.
@TMNT393 жыл бұрын
Love the LED lamp videos Clive! I'm a regular viewer but I never tire of them - massively useful information that helps us consumers win out. Thanks for sharing as always.
@stridermt2k3 жыл бұрын
They will grill the LEDs...then WE shall resist! "The dark fire will not avail you, Flame of Udun!"
@Deiphobuzz3 жыл бұрын
Fucking nerd.. I LOVE it 😂🤣
@matthewellisor58353 жыл бұрын
@@Deiphobuzz I thought I heard Homer Simpson yelling.
@ElvenSpellmaker3 жыл бұрын
Ahh the _kink palculator_ , every time Big Clive said it I'd let out a small chuckle as to how smoothly and seriously he says it.
@welshdave52633 жыл бұрын
I know, of I were doing this I would have to have it written off camera and glance at it just before saying it so as to not say pink calculator. This is Cloves dedication.
@ElvenSpellmaker3 жыл бұрын
@@welshdave5263 yeah haha
@BrazzaB13 жыл бұрын
At first I thought I'd misheard it. Then second, 'Oh yeah!'.
@Gameboygenius3 жыл бұрын
And nanofarts. There's plausible deniability in that one. Not that Clive would deny it.
@ingalf3 жыл бұрын
I love this term! I really admire our all favorite BigClive! Big electrical hugs from edison-screwed germany.
@technodruid2 жыл бұрын
In Canada you can get these EcoSmart branded bulbs, 9W 2700K 800lumen, from Home Depot (12 for 20CAD if I remember correctly) and they are very hackable. They use the JW19813 linear regulator. They come 8led in series, on a board that can accommodate 3 parallel strings of 8. The JW uses an 18 and 33 ohm in parallel to sense. Back of the napkin calculation gives about 5W if you remove the 33ohm, 3W if you remove the 18ohm. Very, very simple to swipe off with an iron or snip out with junker snips. The main power supply is a 10ohm resister on live into a full bridge rectifier, with a 15uF electrolytic 200v in a push through socket and a 680k bleeder in series with a 0ohm jumper.
@MrHanichak23 жыл бұрын
As long as you keep on pulling things apart and explaining how they were I'll be here!
@wuddadid3 жыл бұрын
I think we all want MORE of these videos. Would be cool to set up a long-term experiment to measure the life of original LED lamps vs modified LED lamps.
@NeedleDrops3 жыл бұрын
It would be extremely long term, my LED lamps are rated at 50,000 hours, which is nearly six years continuous use. Cut the stress in half and you’ll have a 12 year experiment potentially.
@TheBeardedDog3 жыл бұрын
Amazing! I took apart several of the LED bulbs I have in my house. I live in the US so we have 170V (120V RMS) power. Unfortunately, your calculation did not quite work out for computing the wattage draw at the end, but I can't complain about 1/2 the power with no detectable loss in lumen output. I did this modification on both Tenergy and Sylvania (Amazon Basics) bulbs rated for 8W output. For the Tenergy bulbs they used an 18 and 20 Ohm resistor. Before removing a resistor I was seeing 8.0W usage and 9.5 Ohms resistance. When removing the 20 Ohm resistor I measured 5.6W usage. When removing the 18 Ohm resistor I measured 5.1W usage. I could not tell the difference when comparing side by side, but after staring for 10-15 seconds my oldest son was able to tell the difference 100% of the time. Keep in mind the difference in light output is very small. When I tested with the Sylvania (Amazon Basics) bulbs the result was ever better. I went straight for the low power draw. The Sylvania's used a 24 and 18 Ohm resistor in parallel. The bulb measured 8.6W usage. I removed the 18 Ohm resistor. This dropped the power draw to 4.15W. I then did a quick test. I have 8 bulbs in the kitchen, all identical. I swapped in a low power Sylvania and kept 7 other unmodified bulbs. All bulbs were visible, with no coverings. I offered $20 US to anyone who could pick out the modified bulb from the 8. After 3 people took the challenge, including my oldest son who knew I was modifying the bulbs for lower power consumption, I still have the $20. Needless to say, I will be removing a resistor from all the bulbs in the house. I am curious though, how low could you go before being able to differentiate between bulbs. If anyone has tried, I am curious what resistor value works best with a Sylvania, aka Amazon Basics bulb in the US..
@matthewellisor58353 жыл бұрын
This Regular is so much enjoying these lamp videos that he has been tinkering with them too. Found some at my local dollar type store of the 2P variety marked 13W and promptly cleared their shelf. Been working on a few to optimize for 24V off-grid PV use at 5W in addition to replacing most of the lamps in the house and just adjusting the value to the amount of light needed in the room. A few have earned a small potentiometer and knob for dimming. Found that, absent a proper hotplate, a clothing iron held base-up worked well to preheat the board while soldering. Slowly adjusting the heat setting until it reflowed and backing off a few notches got me the settings (yes, now marked "Reflow" and "Hotplate" on the dial) in just a few minutes.
@nevenpavlovic4448 Жыл бұрын
I (and I'm sure many others)would love to see how you implemented the pot for dimming.
@nigelh32532 жыл бұрын
Wow! Thanks Big Clive! So now I understand why some LED bulbs I buy don't last long. They're mostly for closed bathroom fittings, so I guess they overheat and burn out. I imagine putting in only a few LEDs per bulb saves pennies, but if they sell millions of bulbs then they make a lot of money.
@MrBanzoid3 жыл бұрын
Imsai Guy was playing around with a blue LED. He showed that you could get I tiny amount of light out with one microamp. For an encore he attached a small antenna to it and it gave out a tiny amount of light from the ambient RF (wifi, FM radio, mobile phone signals etc). Most interesting.
@davidsnell76273 жыл бұрын
Read his note at the beginning. It was April 1st
@BrazzaB13 жыл бұрын
Hands up who though Big Clive was going to test the resistor on the picture? C'mon, you know you did!
@kjur183 жыл бұрын
Actually it did happen in the past.
@BrazzaB13 жыл бұрын
@@kjur18 I think I remember that!......
@XanderProduction3 жыл бұрын
🤣 yeah I thought he will do it again.. But didnt happen..
@kjur183 жыл бұрын
@@XanderProduction He was slightly drunk that time if I remember correctly.
@f.f.s.d.o.a.72943 жыл бұрын
It crossed my mind.
@rogerazambuja3 жыл бұрын
Based on your video I hacked a labeled 4.9 Watt LED Bulb (actually 5.8 Watt based on my wattmeter) that used to work a little bit hot (it has 9 LEDs). Now it works as 2.5 Watt LED Bulb, just a little bit darker (I would say 20%-30% less brighter) and working much colder than before. Can't wait to try it on another bulbs, thank you for your tips. Greetings from Brazil.
@Vinicius_Schneider9 ай бұрын
Por algum motivo, as lâmpadas da Taschibra são perfeitas! Quase não esquentam, não piscam (flickering), e o espectro é muito bom
@MichaelJantzen423 жыл бұрын
I honestly think they need to regulate LED lamps better to make them last longer. I feel like I replace them far more often than I did incandescent lamps (in fact the incandescent lamps that came with my house are all still working, but I've probably replaced every single LED lamps more than once now).
@spacewater73 жыл бұрын
Maybe you get power surges often.
@MichaelJantzen423 жыл бұрын
@@spacewater7 Maybe, but I don't have power supply issues in general - every time I've check the voltage seems to be almost always dead on 120v. The lamps I've pulled apart the LED's just look like they've overheated and been driven too hard.
@mikeraphone67452 жыл бұрын
Have you seen the vid on cooling LEDs to make them last longer ?
@chantryholdman37202 жыл бұрын
Make a dive into the Phoebus cartel of 1924
@Ragnar85042 жыл бұрын
In my place LEDs tend to last several years (long enough that I can't remember the last time I replaced one) while incandescent lamps that saw daily use had to be replaced about twice a year. 25 W ones do last a very long time but the 60 W one in my lounge ceiling light I had to replace quite often.
@liquidsonly2 жыл бұрын
Cheers Clive. I've just "adjusted" some bulbs down to 1W to get me through the winter.
@wich13 жыл бұрын
As a regular, I do not mind at all that you cover a lot of these lamps, it’s great content!
@trudyandgeorge10 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video Clive. For any Aussies, the cheapy Osko and Luci-Belle lamps at bunnings have this sense-resistor circuitry that you can hack at. Again, thanks so much mate. Love the channel and you're a total legend.
@OscarSommerbo3 жыл бұрын
You've taken apart a lot of cheap lamps, why not take apart a "brand" quality lamp to see if there is any difference in construction and driving current.
@BcuzAndy3 жыл бұрын
I agree! A lot of people swear by a brand like Cree and I'd like to know more about what makes them tick.
@drsquirrel003 жыл бұрын
@@BcuzAndy Cree is an mainly an LED, they do make full lights but you don't see them around so much.
@BcuzAndy3 жыл бұрын
@@drsquirrel00 Because they have a physical retail exclusivity contract with Home Depot so that is the only place you'd see them in person.
@francistheodorecatte3 жыл бұрын
I've taken apart some 'brand name' lamps, including from a certain dutch company, and they by-and-large run the LEDs very hard too. not _as_ hard, mind you, but still enough to shorten the lifespan of the LEDs considerably.
@killervirus573 жыл бұрын
Hw might get a cease and desist.
@jacoballen26643 жыл бұрын
As a regular I'm still loving the led lamps. You've actually inspired me to make some diy capacitive droppers for my own LEDs at home
@gmgurp66663 жыл бұрын
When you were having trouble with that resistor it made me want to say: Resistance is Futile.
@stevee77742 жыл бұрын
You will be assimilated....
@TerryLawrence0013 жыл бұрын
Thanks Clive! So much detail! My experience is the same with these cheaper lamps. It is strange that far more expensive lamps fail quicker and have construction that make this hack impossible. As a facility maintenance worker, I have been trying many many lamps until I found these generic ones ( Bought at Home Depot, Box of 12 )to be the longer lasting ones right out of the box. The mod works so well that I may never need to change our more precariously mounted outside lights in my lifetime!
@jakenkid3 жыл бұрын
Clive, you're one of maybe 30 channels on KZbin that make the world better and not worse! So keep on rocking what you're doing, I assure, nobody minds a bit. If they do, they're probably just used to watching some douche show off how disturbingly in debt he is to keep up the appearance of 'cool'. 🤣 Losers Clive, they're losers... 🤣 🤣 THANK YOU KIND SIR FOR THE AWESOME YOU PROVIDE US PEASANTS! 😁
@Graham_Wideman Жыл бұрын
Well, I'm subscribed to over 300 channels, all of which make the world a better place, and I reckon that's only a tiny fraction of all the good channels out there. I try not to waste time on the kind of channels you criticize, and to waste no energy on thinking about them being losers.
@shodan29583 жыл бұрын
Just taken a Poundland rated 5.5w bulb down to 3.2w using this trick. Dunno about heat yet but given the power drop I've probably given it a nice life expectancy boost. Good stuff
@BY504A3 жыл бұрын
Keep the led lamp modification videos coming as they are very interesting. Also love the led solar lamp builds.
@jkobain3 жыл бұрын
I think «Look, they're still buying!» is the most inspiring motto for them, ever.
@poporbit24322 жыл бұрын
Cut open an LED lamp sold under the ACE hardware brand. The pcb #E323980 this is a 12s1p design. The parallel resisters measured 11 ohms. With 24 and 18 ohms in parallel. Removal of the dome required a hack saw. I've cut the 24 ohm out to reduce power to 60% of the original value. Thanks for the information.
@IceBergGeo3 жыл бұрын
As a regular viewer, even though you have put out a large number of the LED videos, there's still more that we're learning. Even yourself, finding the resistor constant, are discovering new things.
@mattfleming863 жыл бұрын
Too many? Never! Until a company makes a bulb that lasts 10+ years, the WORLD NEEDS YOU Clive :-)
@NiyaKouya3 жыл бұрын
Well, Philips does, but "Dubai only" ^^; So we "just" need Clive until a company sells such LEDs worldwide :P
@mattfleming863 жыл бұрын
@@NiyaKouya I still would have no trouble backing a kickstarter for clive to design his own board and have a company in Guangzhou produce them. Infrastructure is already there and most of the design work is already done. If he were to build a "9w" in normal parlance and drive it about 6w and a 6w. driven at 3-4w) i think it would get them off the razors edge well enough to be okay for a LONG time. I do think the board does need airflow though somehow because in inverted fixtures (i.e. decorative lamps) it tends to make a heat reservoir. A few basic upgrades would make a bulb that is certainly marketable at a higher MSRP but produce significantly less waste and frustration. I'd pay for a bulb with a real warranty! Also, if Clive were to become quite wealthy just imagine the cool stuff he could take apart for us :-) "Today I'm on my yacht in international waters and we are going to examine the guidance system of a vintage 60's soviet air to air missle"
@MrDuncl3 жыл бұрын
I'm waiting to see how long the Philips 13W LED bulb in my bedroom lasts. One generation on, but looking similar to the L Prize winner, it weighs 250g (about 9oz) and most of that is finned heatsink. They were well over £10 new though.
@NiyaKouya3 жыл бұрын
@@MrDuncl when it has/needs such a large heatsink to operate that should already tell you that the LEDs are driven way harder than what would lead to a long-lasting lamp ;) But then again, even those hard-driven lamps can last for years which is already a huge improvement over incandescent lamps (on top of the improvement in "light per watt").
@MrDuncl3 жыл бұрын
@@NiyaKouya Are you familiar with the L prize ? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/L_Prize One of the requirements to win it was "Over 25000 hours life". While 13w is high the heatsinking should make sure that requirement was met.
@NiyaKouya3 жыл бұрын
Recently took apart an E14 LED lamp that we decommissioned because it started to flicker. Compared to the ones you took apart it was quite the oddball, glass cover, separate LED board, discrete diodes for rectification and no chip/regulator, just 2 large capacitors, so I guess it (still) uses a capacitive dropper. And I (probably) also found the reason for it flickering, one of the LED modules had the "black spot of doom". Thanks a bunch for all of your videos about LED lamps and how they work, even if you "repeat" certain topics a few times it never gets boring, so please keep doing them!
@stridermt2k3 жыл бұрын
I never ever get tired of lamps and bulbs and tubes. What ever happened to "The Tubes"? They had a great song that is my new Aphasia anthem, "Talk To Later" -Good tune. Good times
@RossIsBored10 ай бұрын
I’ve turned the exact Ultrabrite 6w E27 into 2.5W. I notice a slight loss of brightness but now runs very cool.
@sidraket3 жыл бұрын
So how long until the lightbulb manufacturers start adding things to detect if the bulb has been tampered with for 'safety purposes' requiring more elaborate modifications?
@idjtoal3 жыл бұрын
Or just a blob of epoxy over the resistors. Wouldn't surprise me if they did, can't have the customers cutting into the profit margin now, can we.
@frankmoras633 жыл бұрын
Making it a single resistor would also cause some interesting problems.
@Big_Computer3 жыл бұрын
Not to worry, I will never be bored of LED related videos, I love them, they are so interesting you always find something new with every product you find
@danwhite32243 жыл бұрын
I have always wondered if those circuit board serial numbers actually meant something besides just being date codes or production numbers
@asm_nop3 жыл бұрын
Sometimes it's a serial/batch number, sometimes it's a date code, sometimes part numbers or order numbers from 3rd party suppliers. As another user said, one of the numbers on here is a UL registry number for the manufacturer.
@yusuf-alasit3 жыл бұрын
I find it lovely. Amazing. Helpful. Anyone who shares any hack against programmed obsolescence is worth my love.
@BrendanPerkins3 жыл бұрын
Long live the doobyage! It's a revolution against the LED cookers! 💡
@deelkar3 жыл бұрын
I just opened a 9W V-TAC lamp from Germany and it has a very similar board inside. Differences I spotted: no fuseable resistor on the board (have not checked in the base), capacitor discharge resistor is split into two 510k resistors in series, and the smoothing cap is SMD-soldered on the topside instead of being hid inside the base of the lamp. Also one LED position can be used for either one LED bridging 2 positions or having 2 LEDs there, probably to fine-tune the voltage rating? So it can run either with 15 or 16 LEDs in series
@wimwiddershins3 жыл бұрын
Bulb videos are like LEDs, can never have too many. When do we see a "test" of how much harder the LEDs can be driven?
@Kraschnark3 жыл бұрын
As a non regular I was thankful for your patience! It was very informative to watch some of your Videos again
@ronnierush93793 жыл бұрын
Another Great LED Video and allegedly the possibility of a burning smell from a l*oundland special included :-)
@stvboxtvbox30243 жыл бұрын
i wonder if i should remove the fake bulb cover. will it last longer due to better heat dissipation? drill holes into the plastic fake bulbs?
@Mr.T4LLY-03 жыл бұрын
You apologise for 'deja vu' Clive, I 'm at that age now where I forgot what I had for breakfast! They're your streams, you do as you will. You apologise for 'deja vu' Clive, I 'm at that age now where I forgot what I had for breakfast! They're your streams, you do as you will. You apologise for 'deja vu' Clive:- Hmmmm! Wait a minute!?
@shodan2958 Жыл бұрын
Posted here before but I might as well mention that over two years on from this video, I'm still going through all the bulbs I can find and doing this modification to good results. I've found pricier Philips to Tesco to the worst LED retrofit bulbs you can find can be modified (Sometimes but not always, its roughly 75% in my experience) and I've yet to see even the most terrible bulb bought into the house fail yet. I'm a particular fan of the Tesco ones, pricier than the cheapest ones but the warm white colour is fantastic and retains a very decent amount of light after modification. In general I've noticed per each individual LED module in the bulb its roughly 0.5W after modification which seems a really good result.
@Jkonwins3 жыл бұрын
"over 200v in it, and that hurts if you stick your finger on it! I've done it" 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
@RichardGLean3 жыл бұрын
Wilko in the UK sell LED bulbs with almost identical electronics, expect for a SOT223 instead of the 8 pin DIP. Makes sense as it gives much better thermal coupling. The 2 resisters that set the current (on the 8.2W, 810 lumen light) are 39 and 36 ohms. Nipping off the 39 ohm takes the current drawn by the lamp from 59.8 mA to 37.4 mA (straight measurement with multimeter, not PF corrected as I don't have the tools to measure it.) The modified lamp appears only slightly dimmer and is still plenty bright enough for a bedroom, hallway, etc. All in all, an absolutely excellent hack that involves minimal tools or skill to do, but gives great results. Thank you!
@CDE.Hacker3 жыл бұрын
I can just imagine a room or a hall in your house looking like a Crystal cave.
@Leroys_Stuff3 жыл бұрын
I won’t tire of anything you decide to do I enjoy your content.
@hagen-p3 жыл бұрын
Some of the auto-generated subtitles are hilarious: "...the capacitor and the smaller lower power one is 3.3 megafart versus about 5.6 microfarad." :-D
@Dreamsarefragile3 жыл бұрын
I just sent off my first PCB for prototyping today, thanks Clive for the knowledge and inspiration.
@o_o-_-86393 жыл бұрын
Guy promoting led lights: Led lights are going to last forever Pound land lamps and others like those: Hold my beer
@DejitaruJin3 жыл бұрын
I don't think I'll ever get tired of the LED bulbs. In fact this non-destructive modification is exactly what I've been hoping for.
@stevenspmd3 жыл бұрын
Wouldn't adding the extra resistor increase costs? I guess as you said it is designed to fail.
@benbaselet20263 жыл бұрын
A resistor of course always cost something but if gives them a large range of possible values by using the cheapest possible series of resistors, without going into special valued single ones.
@howlingwolven3 жыл бұрын
You can buy SMD resistors from Mouser for pennies per hundred. I’d imagine that the Chinese companies have cheaper sources and get volume discounts.
@stevenspmd3 жыл бұрын
@@howlingwolven Sure. I guess my point was more that the manufacturer added the extra resistor/cost on purpose so it would fail faster.
@howlingwolven3 жыл бұрын
@@stevenspmd They added the extra resistor to be able to precisely make up the resistance they desire for regulating the lamp precisely where they want it. It just so happens they want the lamp to run hot.
@Peter_S_3 жыл бұрын
Current reel pricing (qty 10000) at LCSC for typical 0603 resistors is US$0.0014/ea. and with 0201 that drops to more like US$0.0008/ea.
@FoxMan7772 жыл бұрын
Love this video. I am in the USA. I have a stash of these dollar store LED lamp bulbs, and must of them blink or shimmer at this point. They didn't last more than a few weeks each. I opened up one and these use an actual surface mount capacitor can soldered on to the SMD traces. The cap is bulged and so I think the manufacturing run has bad caps for all the bulbs I have. My first goal is to get them running right with new caps, then turn down wattage for longer life. Thank you for this video! :)
@FoxMan7772 жыл бұрын
Could these be hacked for lower AC voltages like 12/24 AC supply? or even DC?
@aaaaaaaaaassssssssdf3 жыл бұрын
i got some dollar tree bulbs that were "hackable" and quite pleasant for a bedroom light with one of the two resistors cut... got another one and it's a much different design...
@anthonybarra23912 жыл бұрын
Information, knowledge, and entertainment by a top personality..thankyou big man
@bracco233 жыл бұрын
As you showed earlier, the I=0.6/R and P=V*I. So if you do P*R and plug all in you end up getting V*0.6, which does not depend on the resistor. That's why you get always the same number I think.
@LAL6666662 жыл бұрын
P*R = V² ( V squared) 195 = V(power supply) * 0.6
@BushCampingTools2 жыл бұрын
Great video as always. Yeah so much for long life LEDs. Plus overheating because these flimsy joke of an Al heat sink/circuit base can't do much to really lower the temp especially with the lack of air flow.
@rebsdioramas3 жыл бұрын
Ah yes, everyone needs a Kink Palculator. 1 screw up during a stream and it's stuck :p.
@72polara3 жыл бұрын
I worked as a two radio tech for 20 years, troubleshooting to the component level, and enjoy all your videos. Now with the Rona, and not much to do but kill time, I take everything to bits if nothing else but to see how cheaply something is made. I have got the idea to pop the globe off of the LED bulb over my kitchen sink that I have on all the time (so I never come home to a dark house) and see if I can chance a resistor and make it last longer.
@TheUnknownCatWarrior3 жыл бұрын
I freaking hate amazon basics light bulbs after taking a broken apart, 5 LEDs, 1 resistor and a dodgy capacitor with no uF rating
@TheBauwssss3 жыл бұрын
Could you please maybe/perhaps exhume a few more complicated devices for your next few videos? This would greatly increase at the very least my own and probably everyone else's viewing pleasure. Something more complex, such as a gizmo or a gadget, with a larger and more densely populated PCB, and without any solar panels preferably. Pretty much anything would do honestly, assuming it is either electric and/or electromechanical and used for anything than illumination, of course 😉 I think I'm speaking for pretty much every single regular viewer watching this video when I say that any such video of yours would be a very welcome addition to their subscription feed! And as an added bonus it would certainly ameliorate this LED stagnation syndrome we regular viewers are *current* -ly experiencing! (see what I did there, Clive? 😂) Thank you for your daily super entertaining vidjeohs bro! It is always a great pleasure to see a notification pop into my inbox when you upload something new 😁👍 Kind regards from the Netherlands. I hope you have a great weekend!!
@MacVision3D3 жыл бұрын
Never to many bulb videos Clive ,
@rasmis3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, I'm a regular, and I'm learning a lot from it. Maybe include a deeper explanation for different parts in each video. E.g.: Why is the resistance of two resistors in parallel equal to the highest minus the lowest value? In the Poundland lamp 82 Ω - 51 Ω = 31 Ω.
@bige24873 жыл бұрын
Hello Clive, I just bought 2 of these and opened one and they are on to you lol where there were 2 resistors and you cut one out now there is only 1 and i see the spot where the second one was suppose to go so no more quick mods on those lights. I'm going to try to solder on a higher resistor where they left the spot open for that second resistor and see if that helps. but i assume they will change the boards entirely soon to stop us from doing these mods.
@bigclivedotcom3 жыл бұрын
You'll have to remove the existing resistor before soldering in a higher value. The existing solder on the pads makes it a bit easier on those awkward aluminium laminate PCBs.
@CountDrunkula3 жыл бұрын
Those crystal covers remind me of Doctor Who and the squeaky cave spiders that scared the bejaysus out of me.
@yocobicus Жыл бұрын
Just a normal viewer, I am thinking that this design with a PCB was designed to intentionally be overpowered and have the least amount of material to dissipate heat. They are pushing way too much power to each LED which in turn makes them hotter and burn out quicker than the design states it should on paper. Since they're in a series a normal homeowner will just throw out the light bulb and not deal looking for a solution to dim or flickering bulbs. I definitely am more interested on the technical side for sure. So, this is helping tremendously. What would your opinion be a bulb like (SYLVANIA LED TruWave Natural Series)
@rawfpv12073 жыл бұрын
from the very early days, light bulbs were made to have shorter life spans, the big boys in game made sure they all stuck to an amount of hours and would have to send a bulb to tested and were fined if theyre bulb lasted longer
@regmigrant3 жыл бұрын
the sort of cartel that would be illegal today and yet law makers never go back to them to ask, wtf!
@markm00003 жыл бұрын
@@regmigrant hahaha law makers actually defending the public. What a joke you almost had me there.
@kanishka.b8550 Жыл бұрын
Hi again.. I’ve watched few videos of you in the past.! But recently I followed every LED video and learned many things! Thank you. I actually brought few LED lamps back to life which were on a dark corner of the house.! Thanks for answering my stupid questions in other videos too🤗😇. Much appreciated.!
@Fifury1613 жыл бұрын
11:18 - I thought you had forgot yourself and were about to measure the resistors on the printout!
@Deiphobuzz3 жыл бұрын
I love these video's. Im an apprentice, this really gets me into little circuits and teaches me stuff I can apply in the field tomorrow. This really helps me apply Ohms law in real life. Im a very visual person. I need to see what it does to put it all together. Just mashing out calculations on paper does nothing for me. Thanks and keep it up 😁👍👍
@EldaLuna3 жыл бұрын
i really hate these led bulb styles.. enclosed cap. lets also put plastic over the aluminum cause eff cooling them so they die faster. always say on the package to never put them in enclosed fixtures.. well maybe they should take note of that them self's rofl. sadly no end to it. sure can get the filament like ones don't get hot if at all usually but still driven hard. get these and still driven hard but now napalm edition. mean while my fin ribbed metal leds out in open from almost 8 or 9 years ago still function in one of my rooms...
@XanderProduction3 жыл бұрын
🥺 oh.... Antique LED Bulbs..
@EldaLuna3 жыл бұрын
lmao. ikr but i like old stuff so its just me. i still use T12 florescent tubes as well so yeah im one of these people eheh.
@McTroyd3 жыл бұрын
I rather like that you're making these videos, Clive, even if they're repetitive. Especially as they cheapen these lamps, making an easy hack like this widely known becomes important. 👍
@howlingwolven3 жыл бұрын
The formula for series resistors is Rt=R1+R2+... and for parallel resistors it’s Rt = 1/((1/R1)+(1/R2)+...) That works out to 24.32 ohms for the lamp you modified with the edison fitting, within tolerance of your measurement.
@JasperJanssen3 жыл бұрын
Don’t forget within tolerance of the resistors in question.
@LenKusov3 жыл бұрын
Helpful tip for soldering onto the aluminum heatsinks: wattage is your friend, and custom tips for soldering guns can easily be made from standard solid-core house wire. My Wall-Lenk 100/200 watt gun doesn't put out its full advertised wattage with a tiny little custom SMD soldering tip, but it's MORE than enough to overpower the conduction of the heatsink and actually solder to tiny things. Also quite useful for old point-to-point gear that has galvanized steel chassis with ground wires soldered straight to the case. And, for the Americans watching this, our LED lamps are constructed somewhat differently - the globes aren't held on with brittle glue, but MUCH more stubborn silicone glue that's all stretchy and needs a good pry with a butter knife or something to come loose, spudgers just bend. And, out of the 5 lamp brands/configurations I found lying around within the last 15 minutes, only one of them was of this configuration with the resistors on top, the rest had most of the circuitry buried in the base of the lamp with only the LEDs and the capacitor socket accessible without unscrewing things, unbending the heatsink tabs, and desoldering the mains wires.
@thewiLik3 жыл бұрын
This is a great follow up to using the capacitor dropper for the floodlights. Great work, keep 'em coming! :D
@RichardRoy22 жыл бұрын
As much as you might think you're doing these to death, I really appreciate them. For one thing, I'm learning how to extend the life of lamps that should have been longer lasting than they actually do, for another, you're teaching someone who knows next to nothing about electronics a bit more about electronics. I love it. Consider yourself subscribed. Nicely done.
@Almrond3 жыл бұрын
I always appreciate these videos, no matter the content. This one in particular is quite justified for posterity; the manufacturer insight alone is quite interesting to me :)
@VAX19703 жыл бұрын
“The candle that burns twice as bright, burns half as long”
@quinbus51 Жыл бұрын
Clive, many thanks for your work in this area! I have an application in my midwestern USA home with two indoor flood lights configured as downlights (bases up). The kitchen is about 4 years old and I've had to replace each of the lamps (best I could buy--GE Reveal, 90w) FOUR TIMES! They work for the majority of the year and then most often go to pulsing on and off with a duty cycle ranging from a couple of minutes all the way down to 30 seconds or less. I've taken them apart and the failure has always been in an individual LED chip. I've always thought the problem was heat related and have tried drilling holes in the case to introduce a chance for less heat pooling up around the lamp's PCB (base up, remember). After the bulb has been illuminated for 30 minutes, it really is getting too hot to touch in there. I've contacted GE about the problem and always get a kindly sounding voice that profusely apologizes, sends me a couple of coupons for replacement lamps for my trouble, but "no, we know of no general case problem with these lamps." Your work opened my eyes to the REAL issue here--it's not really a heat problem, per se, but one of pushing too much current thru those LED modules! I'm of a belief at this point that running the PCB naked (without baffle, base or additional cooling) would still result in the same problem eventually--the LEDs are cooking until they fail internally! So, anyway, using your exploration as a starting point, I opened up two new GE basic indoor floors and although the circuit design is different than what you demonstrate in this video, it wasn't hard to find two PCB resistors in parallel draining a little controller to ground. I scraped off the smaller of the two, as per your experiment and total wattage in the lamp went from 13W down to 6, which means each of the 30 LED chips went from almost half a watt down to below a 1/4 watt! Reduction in light was certainly noted, but hardly enough to worry about (my guess is 10%?). I went ahead and drilled a series of 1/4" vent holes high up in the base, just down from the screw base, just for grins. Anyway, thanks again! I'm pretty confident that I'll be buying far, far fewer LED bulbs in the future. I'm going to now routinely modify all LED bulbs as per the "Clive Protocol!"
@kortlee8 ай бұрын
Thanks for your extensive explanation. I too am hoping to learn to routinely fix broken LED lights, by removing one of the resistors by scratching it out or breaking it with small long nose pliars. And drilling holes in the base to enable air movement and heat dissipation in the aluminium base. Another from watching videos is that internal lights last longer when the plastic light defuser is removed. Because the LED's don't heat up as badly when the bulb cover (plastic defuser) is removed. Apparently it's beneficial if the LED's don't get hotter than 80 degrees celcius or 180 Fahrenheit. I'm not sure, how much extra life the Light has, with the drilled holes, 1 resistor removed and the plastic bulb removed (plastic light cover defuser). But, I'd like to think that it helps reduce landfill with the Light lasting longer. Just some info for older people who remember using Watts as there guideline for lighting strength. Gauging The Brightness Of LED Lights 60W = 800 lumens. 75W = 1100 lumens. 100W = 1600 lumens. 150W = 2600 lumens. So from the above old Watt values we once used, it's obvious that even lowering the Wattage in a new LED Light, we're still much much better off lighting wise than we were many many years ago. Thanks again.
@Talmiior3 жыл бұрын
I've watched many of your videos, but it was this one that made me subscribe xD
@nabarnes3 жыл бұрын
I have a string of filament bulbs outside the house, 24 bulbs in total at 15W each. Yes, they look pretty, but 360W to look pretty is quite a lot. Plus whenever the bulbs blow, they trip the RCD and cost a lot to replace (if you can even find them for sale). As well as the ES GLS bulbs, Poundland also sell mini-globe LED lamps with ES threads which make them a perfect replacement. From their rated 5.5W (on just five LEDs, so I imagine they won't last long at that rating), I can cut the lowest value resistor out and make them run at just 2W. 48W for the whole string at around the same brightness as the filament bulbs is much more reasonable. Thank you for the hack!
@JopardBDS2 жыл бұрын
I've randomly found this video in my KZbin recommendations and am so glad I have. I've only got a rudimentary knowledge of electrical but keep toying with the idea of stripping down elements of corn bulb style led bulbs and powering them from a USB powerbank (with appropriate additional components add). I'm going to look at more of these videos as I feel I may learn what I need from them
@TheFreak1113 жыл бұрын
"sick of these LED lamps" no you silly, that is one of the reaons for liking your channel. You reviewing the progress of these lights over time is darn interesting. Please just do as you fancy.
@MultiMikim3 жыл бұрын
This is fantastic. I just did this little mod. Had two LED lights in the bathroom that were just a little bit too bright. Cut the resistor and they are still almost too bright but running off half the power and they will last longer. I was thinking half the power half the light but I can't even tell unless I alternate back and forth with an unmodified bulb. Neat!